Featuring
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514 examples of Featuring in a sentence
It's true that Danny Steinmann's "The Unseen" is a simplistic horror thriller with a very predictable plot, no particular attempts for twists or surprises whatsoever and
featuring
literally every single cliché the genre has brought forward over the decades, but that doesn't necessarily make it a bad film.
Really good horror flick
featuring
to of the greatest, Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi.
Orson Welles' "The Lady From Shanghai" does not have the brilliant screenplay of "Citizen Kane," e.g., but Charles Lawton, Jr.'s cinematography, the unforgettable set pieces (such as the scene in the aquarium, the seagoing scene
featuring
a stunning, blonde-tressed Rita Hayworth singing "Please Don't Love Me," and the truly amazing Hall of Mirrors climax), and the wonderful cast (Everett Sloane in his greatest performance, Welles in a beautifully under-played role, the afore-mentioned Miss Hayworth--Welles' wife at the time--at her most gorgeous) make for a very memorable filmgoing experience.
There was another movie
featuring
a heavy metal band in it, but it was very different in how it played out as it had a band that kind of took over a town of kids and made them crazy.
As a movie, I found Nancy Drew quite enjoyable -
featuring
cameos from Bruce Willis and Adam Goldberg (The Hebrew Hammer) and supporting roles
featuring
Tate Donovan (Jimmy Cooper on the O.C.) and Rachel Leigh Cook (She's All That).
No doubt we'll be seeing some depressing nonsense
featuring
some " hunky and macho freedom fighters " from the IRA .
This movie set out to be better than the average action movie and in that regard they succeeded.This movie had spectacular cinematography
featuring
spectacular mountain snow and heights,a very fit Stallone putting in a good performance as well,an exciting plot,and a great performance from it's main villain becouse he will really shock you with his evil ways.The movie does not rank an all time great becouse of the weak screen play.The plot and story cries for this movie to make Stallone an extra special human,much like the Rambo or Rocky or Bond movie characters.They chose to humanise Stallone's character in this one which is ok but considering the plot's style,weakens the excitement factor.Also,the dialogue was cheesy and carelessly condescending at times.The script should have been more realistic and less "talky".Another weak point was the unrealistic shooting scenes.The movie makers should have been more carefull how they hadled the shooting hits and misses.They should have continued the quality of the scenes of the shooting sequences during the plane hijacking early in the movie.Instead,they decided to water down a lot of the shooting sequences (ala "A-Team" TV series) as soon as the villains set foot on the mountain tops.This movie had a lot of all time great potential.Crisper action sequences,better dialogue and more Rambo/Rocky style emotion/determination from Stallone would have taken this movie to a higher level.I know this was not Stallone's fault.I sense the movie's director wanted to tone down Stallone's character and try to steal the movie by taking credit for his direction which was not all that great if not for his cinematographer.Sill a good movie though........
In the grand tradition of Disney, inferior sequels are made, and occasionally TV series
featuring
the adventures of minor characters from their biggest hits.
The best episode, rightfully saved for last, is the one
featuring
Jon Pertwee as a horror film actor--it is really excellent.
"The Emperor's Candlesticks" starring William Powell and Luise Rainer is such a film, with supporting roles
featuring
two young stars, Robert Young and Maureen O'Sullivan.
Quite what the reason for both films
featuring
the same title is anyone's guess: I know that Italian filmmakers were more interested in making money than anything else, but surely releasing two films under the same title would do more harm than good when it came to the box office...but oh well.
The Puppet Master series is comprised of really awful movies
featuring
really cool puppets.
Will we be talking about a "rockumentary" film twenty or thirty years from now
featuring
performances by "N'Synch", Britney Spears and Red Hot Chili Peppers?
Based on Terry Southern's classic novel, CANDY is remarkable film
featuring
a swinging soundtrack, actors like Richard Burton and Marlon Brando spoofing themselves, and a fast-moving picaresque story that satirizes late 60s America (military, academia, Eastern religion, etc).
A lot of good footage is offered of the band rehearsing and then giving a sensational concert
featuring
several other artists.
He says "Zah!" to some people in a general store and there's an odd flashback
featuring
the hillbilly from "The Giant Spider Invasion."
Some of the material is quite good ('The Shaggy Studio Executive,' where Walt Disney comes back as a guy in a dog suit), some of it's dated badly (A 'Snacktime' concession stand advert
featuring
a stoned guy with the munchies), a lot of it you have to think for a minute or two to figure out what's supposed to be funny (Who knew the eulogist at the biker funeral was supposed to be a takeoff of Georgie Jessel?).
An added bonus for me was the soundtrack
featuring
two Bruce Springsteen songs which nicely compliment Pam Springsteen's black and white photographs.
The film opens with several embarrassingly puerile skits
featuring
the "Dice man".
Made for TV movie also
featuring
Candace Cameron who is repeatedly abducted and probed by space aliens is desperate for help.
The problem being that the formula was already a bit calcified by the time Airplane was made in 1980, and this steaming heap was sh...uh, made, in 1990,
featuring
a never-went-anywhere Saturday Night Live alum named Gary Kroeger from the brutally bad seasons 8-10.
It has a "play-within-a play" performance of scenes from Uncle Tom's Cabin
featuring
Whites in ludicrous black-face complete with white sugar donut lips.
by having a Black main character and
featuring
lots of black characters I thought maybe it could be trying to get a larger black audience.
When I first heard of this movie I thought it was goingto be an awesome time-traveling movie with lots off dogfighting
featuring
WW2 Japanese planes on American jet action!But do I get that?
This is an extremely well-made little B picture,
featuring
fine acting by all, a compact story and some real suspense.
I would imagine a cast
featuring
two African Americans would have been extremely bold at this time.
Terrible English language title but what do you do if you have the delectable Edwige Fenech
featuring
in a fairly ordinary gangster movie, in which she strips several times - to great effect?
The first installment of a third-rate detective series,
featuring
a former safe-cracker, Blackie (Chester Morris), his sidekick the Runt (Charles Wagenheim), and the impatient Inspector Farraday (Richard Lane).
One simply cannot compare, say, the "classical" version released two years later
featuring
Dame Joan Sutherland (possibly the greatest soprano ever, but at the end of her incredible career)and Luciano Pavorotti (to whom comparable comments also apply).
Extremely slight actioner
featuring
clean-cut, country club kids turning into suburban Rambos when one of their friends (a busty blonde, no less!) is kidnapped by nefarious third world villains, who naturally keep their caged hostage half-nude.
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